I trusted my husband.
Completely.
So when Darren told me he would spend every Saturday taking care of his sick uncle, I didn’t question it.
Three months ago, he came into the bedroom loosening his tie, looking tired.
“Uncle Michael had a stroke,” he said. “Nothing major, but he shouldn’t be alone right now.”
I sat down, concerned. “How serious is it?”
“Not terrible,” he replied. “But the doctor wants him resting. No stress. No driving. He needs help.”
Michael lived two hours away.
No family nearby.
It made sense.
“I’ll go every Saturday,” Darren said. “Clean up, get groceries, cook for him. Just make sure he’s okay.”
After twenty-five years of marriage, I didn’t hesitate.
Darren had always been dependable.
The kind of man who planned everything.
Remembered everything.
So every Saturday at 9 a.m., like clockwork, he grabbed his keys and left.
At first, I admired him.
“That’s really kind of you,” I told him one morning.
He shrugged. “He’s family. You’d do the same.”
By the second week, I offered to go with him.
“I could help,” I said. “Or just keep you company.”
He shook his head quickly.
“It’s better if I handle it alone,” he said. “He’s not up for visitors.”
I accepted that.
But something about it… stayed with me.
Every Saturday, the same routine.
The same time.
The same explanation.
No photos.
No updates beyond “he’s doing okay.”
Still, I trusted him.
Until one afternoon, everything changed.
I was organizing old papers when I came across a number scribbled on a card.
Uncle Michael’s.
Without thinking much about it, I decided to call.
Just to check in.
To see how he was doing.
The phone rang twice.
Then a familiar voice answered.
“Hello?”
“Hi, Uncle Michael, it’s Claire,” I said warmly. “I just wanted to see how you’re feeling.”
There was a pause.
Longer than it should have been.
Then he said something that made my entire body go still.
“Claire… I’m fine,” he said slowly. “But… I haven’t seen Darren in six months.”
I couldn’t speak.
I thought maybe I misheard him.
“I’m sorry… what?” I asked.
“I haven’t seen him,” he repeated. “Not since last summer.”
The room felt like it shifted under me.
Every Saturday.
Every excuse.
Every early morning goodbye.
All of it… a lie.
I ended the call with shaking hands.
And for the first time in twenty-five years, I didn’t recognize the man I was married to.
That evening, I sat in the living room waiting for him to come home.
Listening for the sound of his keys in the door.
Because whatever truth he had been hiding…
I was about to hear it from him.